Annie
Diamond Member
- Nov 22, 2003
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I liked this, kind of gets to the differences in perspective between those that keep reaching and those that want a hand out. BTW, I made my donation to the Red Cross for New Orleans already. As of 3 am, things look a tad better, down to Cat 4 and seems to be wobbling a bit to the west:
http://vodkapundit.com/archives/008059.php
http://vodkapundit.com/archives/008059.php
Late Night Rambling
Posted by Stephen Green · 28 August 2005
I'm doing the same thing tonight most everyone else is watching the news, waiting for disaster to strike.
It amazes me, every time, how calm Americans remain when, ah, stuff hits the fan. Mostly, the folks in Katrina's way have packed the things they just can't leave behind, and headed north. They'll stay in motels or with friends or with families, and there they'll do what the rest of us are doing: Watch it all unfold on TV.
Sure, there will be a few idiots. Some people wouldn't leave their homes if they were made out of those really yummy Pepperidge Farm cookies with the chocolate chunks and Macadamia nuts, and CNN had video of a 100-foot Cookie Monster bearing right down on them. Well, that's their problem. There will be a few looters, and more that a few profiteers although the latter, believe it or not, will be performing a valuable public service as they rake in the bucks.
There will be idiots outside Katrina's wake, too mostly on TV. The Robertsons and the Falwells and the Middle Eastern fatwa-issuing fuckers who'll claim the storm came because we let gays live together and don't all grow beards down to our collarbones. Well, screw them.
Mostly though, we'll keep our good heads on our square shoulders, and get through this with the same grit that got us through other hurricanes, 9/11, the Civil War, etc.
Think about 9/11 for a moment, and how similar our reaction was then to today. For Katrina, we had warning. 9/11 came as a complete surprise. But in each awful event, most people went on living. You saw Palestinians dancing on the streets four years ago, but you didn't see massive protests in our country, demanding that the President push The Button and annihilate some Arab city in retaliation.
We watched the horror on TV. We gave blood. We donated money and time. Our noble rescue workers did their rescue work, long after it had become obvious there was no one to rescue. And then we thought about our families and our jobs and how quickly we could get back to them.
The everyday business of life here is our normal; disasters are the unexpected. In too much of the world, things run the other way around.
We're privileged here, and our attitudes reflect that. But our privileges are also due in part because of our attitudes. People who expect disaster usually find it. People who consider disasters as something out of the ordinary generally have ordinary lives and that's an extraordinary thing.
Let me explain. Something like half the tornadoes in the world happen here in the US. Of those, something like half of them hit Oklahoma. And yet, Oklahoma remains a decent place to live, filled mostly with decent people. They haven't erected any tornado shrines. They haven't started any new cults. The tornadoes come, the tornadoes go, and life goes on much the same way it does in the other 49 states.
We expect life to be decent, and mostly it is.
But which is cause and which is effect?
Watching how most Americans respond to disaster should be proof enough which is which.